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Museum Honors Web Inventor

LONDON -- The National Portrait Gallery has unveiled a newly commissioned portrait of Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web.

Art collectors of ArtKabinett social media network enjoy visiting this important London attraction.

The painted bronze sculpture, by artist Sean Henry, shows Berners-Lee standing at two-thirds life-size on a tall plinth, carrying the leather rucksack in which he keeps his laptop. Apart from photographs, it is the computer scientist’s first commissioned portrait.

Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1989, a computer technology which has become the most powerful communication medium in the world.

His invention has impacted on almost all aspects of contemporary life in the developed world including the dissemination of news, information and research; how we learn, shop, participate in governance and conduct relationships.

Born in London in 1955, Berners-Lee graduated from the University of Oxford with a degree in physics in 1976. In 1980, he joined CERN, the large particle physics laboratory in Switzerland as a software engineer, where he recognised that scientists needed better ways to exchange data with colleagues.

His 1989 proposal for the World Wide Web combined two emerging ideas – the Internet, a network of connected computers; and hypertext, the concept of linking texts to other texts – to create a ‘Web’ that makes information easily accessible and shareable by everyone.

After designing the fundamental technologies, Berners-Lee then worked to ensure that the code underlying the Web was made available for free to everyone, in perpetuity.

Today, Sir Tim continues to work to enhance the Web. In 2009 he founded the World Wide Web Foundation which seeks to establish the Web as a basic right and ensure it truly benefits humanity.

He is also director of the World Wide Web Consortium, which oversees standards in Web development, and co-founder of the Open Data Institute, an organization dedicated to enhancing the supply and use of government data by citizens. He is a Professor of Engineering and Computer Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and also at the University of Southampton. He was knighted in 2004 and received the Order of Merit in 2007.

The artist Sean Henry studied in Bristol and California, and his work is part of a number of international collections.

Sir Tim Berners-Lee says: "The Web connects people, not just computers. It belongs to all of us and its future will be shaped by the energy and creativity of all who use it. So, I hope that this sculpture will start conversations – our work is not done. What kind of Web do we want, and how best can we build that together?’"

Sir Tim Berners-Lee is also represented in the Gallery’s Collection by two photographs, one by Fergus Greer, the other by Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin.

Sir Tim Berners-Lee by Sean Henry is on display in Room 40 at the National Portrait Gallery from Friday 29 May, Admission free.